The Los Angeles City Council today unanimously passed a measure eliminating fees that TV pilots pay to film in the city. The politicians also passed a measure to waive similar fees for the first year for any LA-filmed pilot that is picked up to series. Proposed last year by councilman and Hollywood-friendly mayoral candidate Eric Garcetti, the measures are designed to stop the siphoning of production and jobs from LA to other cities and regions. Permitting organization FilmLA says 92 pilots were produced in LA last year out of a total of 152.
Even with a city budget estimated to be $327 million in the red, the loss of the fees won’t hurt LA very much. The city collected approximately $231,000 in fees related to TV pilot production during the 2011-2012 fiscal year. That loss in revenue was small, Garcetti said in arguing for the waivers, because encouraging pilots to film in LA could have a greater spillover effect to the local economy — especially if the pilots become series and stay in town. While pilot production, like almost all production, has fallen in LA in recent years, it is seeing a bit of an upturn. FilmLA said earlier this year that pilot production in 2012 was actually up 2.2% compared with 2011.
Deadline's Dominic Patten - tip him here.


Oh, Lord. Permit fees are not the reason anyone shoots or doesn’t shoot in L.A. Tax credits/rebates from other states and countries is the sole reason not to shoot in L.A.
Another thing that hurts filming in los angeles is the crazy amount of money people want for very small requests. In other states if you need to put a light on the roof of a building you are already shooting in front of, they just let you. In Los Angeles, that’ll be another $10,000. Not exaggerating. Had it happen to me last night. In most neighborhoods that filmmakers find visually appealing, the the homeowners or apartment dwellers find every little thing to complain about, turning away future production. Thats not mentioning the people downtown that will drop a bottle of piss out of the 15th floor on a crew.
Some may say this isn’t enough, but I think its great that any effort to recapture production from other states is being made. Good job LA City Council.
I guess all Eric Garcetti needed to do this was be a candidate for Mayor.
A step in the right direction. LA and the whole state need to do much more to attract production back, but is a good first step.
It’s WAY more than Arnold did .
This is wonderful, but ironically, production crews get much more respect and hospitality outside of L.A. The nostalgic will always trump the jaded.
It’s a start.
I am happy that somebody did something and that people are talking about it. Those complaining it amounts to nothing sound like the 5 year old unhappy about his birthday gifts because he wanted more. I say be happy and encourage behavior that moves in the right direction.
The local fees are secondary to the over regulated crafts and Teamsters wage structure compared to Florida and North Carolina.
Step in the right direction. Hopefully this will put more focus on additional needed film related issues in the coming months.
We need a “boots on the ground” PR campaign to reaffirm what the industry does for our local economy and what negative actions do to chase it away.